Human rights activist Boniface Mwangi is back home, but the physical and emotional trauma he carries has shaken the nation. After disappearing for four days, Mwangi has surfaced with a chilling account of torture, fear, and survival that has left Kenyans stunned—and demanding answers.
“I’ve gone through four dark days. I’ve been tortured badly, I can barely walk,” Mwangi said
The pain in his words mirrors the pain in his body. A man known for standing up to injustice now finds himself a victim of the very terror he’s fought against for years.
But what’s even more haunting is his concern for Agatha, a woman he says was abducted and tortured alongside him.
“Wherever Agatha is, she should know we are praying for her and her safety,” he said, his voice trembling with worry.
Her whereabouts remain unknown, and the silence surrounding her fate is deafening.
Who took them? Why were they targeted? And how can such cruelty go unanswered in a country that calls itself a democracy?
Mwangi thanked the public for raising their voices and demanding his safe return. “Your solidarity wasn’t in vain,” he said. “Thank you to everyone who stood with us.”
Now, the call is louder than ever: Kenyans want the truth. They want accountability. They want justice—not just for Boniface, but for Agatha, and for every voice that has been silenced in fear.
This is no longer just a personal tragedy. It’s a national moment of reckoning. And it demands action.
By Kenyans
